Review: mesenchymal stem cells:
cell-based reconstructive therapy in orthopedics
Review: mesenchymal stem cells:
cell-based reconstructive therapy in orthopedics.
Caplan AI.
Skeletal Research Center, Department of Biology, Case
Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA. ddb9@case.edu
Adult stem cells provide replacement and repair descendants
for normal turnover or injured tissues. These cells have
been isolated and expanded in culture, and their use for
therapeutic strategies requires technologies not yet
perfected. In the 1970s, the embryonic chick limb bud
mesenchymal cell culture system provided data on the
differentiation of cartilage, bone, and muscle. In the
1980s, we used this limb bud cell system as an assay for the
purification of inductive factors in bone. In the 1990s, we
used the expertise gained with embryonic mesenchymal
progenitor cells in culture to develop the technology for
isolating, expanding, and preserving the stem cell capacity
of adult bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs).
The 1990s brought us into the new field of tissue
engineering, where we used MSCs with site-specific delivery
vehicles to repair cartilage, bone, tendon, marrow stroma,
muscle, and other connective tissues. In the beginning of
the 21st century, we have made substantial advances: the
most important is the development of a cell-coating
technology, called painting, that allows us to introduce
informational proteins to the outer surface of cells.
These
paints can serve as targeting addresses to specifically dock MSCs or other reparative cells to unique tissue addresses.
The scientific and clinical challenge remains: to perfect
cell-based tissue-engineering protocols to utilize the
body's own rejuvenation capabilities by managing surgical
implantations of scaffolds, bioactive factors, and
reparative cells to regenerate damaged or diseased skeletal
tissues.
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